Strangest story- ever, Imaginary friend

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Uploaded by on Feb 27, 2011

This is the third segment of the animated version of my graphic novel, Strangest story ever told, book 1.
Notes: Men, in their self-delusion, think they have been doing their will all along and that they are motivated by love of family, country and God. Unfortunately, nothing could be further from the truth. To understand why simply look at the psychological profile of the corporate "person" When corporations won the legal right of personhood they also created a template on which to mold the individual businessman. He begins as a bright, idealistic but ambitious recruit. He believes in the American Dream. As time marches on he finds it necessary to compromise his ideals or at the least to justify the indiscretions of the elite. He has entered the rat race and he's running against time. Conversations become shorter, more superficial as his eyes begin to reveal hollowness even while the lips smile. He dreams of wealth and respectability and in time he gets it. The money is there but it's not enough. He becomes greedy. Now he is the one making decisions that hurt others. What happened to the golden boy? His vices have replaced the girl of his dreams. He has this wretched hunger that can never be satisfied by materialism. He is a lost soul. The corporation has developed similarly. It was born of farmers, laborers and independent innovators working together to build the American Empire. But somehow the American psyche fractured until today for every good policy promoted by spokesmen and politicians there is troubling collateral damage and hidden agendas. The corporation as an individual has turned into a psychopath. He seems to be the ideal citizen and good neighbor but behind closed doors he is busy creating a Frankenstein world.

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